Written by D-Mitch
The Chilean Scorpenes are currently the most modern diesel-electric submarines in the continent |
In
the following infographic, named The Americas Submarines, I
depict all the submarines that are in active service in America as of July 1st 2018. Currently, the United States Navy operates a massive amount of powerful nuclear-powered submarines, consisting of 14 Ohio class
ballistic missile submarines (SSBN), four (4) Ohio class (modified)
guided missile submarines (SSGN), three (3) Seawolf class
nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSN) (including the highly modified USS Jimmy Carter SSN-23), 16 Virginia class SSN, 22 Improved Los Angeles class SSN, and 10 Los Angeles class SSN (see The United States Navy submarines in 2018). Three more Los Angeles boats are on paper still in commission but actually are out of service. San Francisco is being converted to Moored Training Ship (MTS), Jacksonville, has started a months-long preparation for inactivation and decommissioning and Buffalo is under inactivation and decommissioning procedure. Regarding the rest of the countries in the continent, there is no nuclear-powered
submarine
(SSN) in any Navy (at least until Brazil commissions its first vessel
after 2020), neither there is a submarine equipped with Air-Independent
Propulsion (AIP) system (the Chilean Scoprene class submarines are
fitted but not with the system and will receive it in a future refit).
It should be mentioned also that from the 21 countries of Latin America,
only seven navies (7) have submarines in their fleet; Peru has the most
numerous fleet but Brazil and Chile the most modern submarine fleets in
the region. Moreover, the 92% of the Latin American submarines are
German-built (!). Also, Argentina, while it has in its inventory the
largest submarine in the region (TR1700 class: 67 meters length and
2,100t displacement), none of its submarines is currently in active service (see more details at The Attack Submarines of Latin America in 2018). In the Americas, there are 98 submarines in total of which the 69 are of the U.S.Navy.
The Americas submarines in 2018. For a high resolution image click here. |
CANSUBFOR looks good. I am trying to confirm with RCN whether there is really supposed to be a hyphen in pennant numbers (USN puts hyphen in hull numbers). BTW, Canadian flag proportion is 1:2 not like US 1:1.9 (many flag images get proportion wrong). Keep 'em coming!
ReplyDeleteThank you for your message Colin. Yes, I am aware of the different proportions of the flags but I just wanted everything to be in harmony and as much as similar as possible. I should create a different graph in the future.
DeleteD.